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Mozart portrait found in museum storage

BERLIN, Jan. 18 (UPI) -- An 18th century portrait of an unidentified man found in storage in a Berlin museum has been authenticated as a likeness of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.

A spokesman for the Gemaldegalerie, one of Berlin's most prestigious museums, said the portrait of a bewigged man, full-faced and smiling and wearing a lace fichu under his open-throated jacket was initially described as the portrait of an unknown subject attributed to German artist Johann Georg Edlinger. It had been acquired by the Gemaldegalerie 70 years ago.

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Extensive computer analysis confirmed the attribution and helped identify it as a portrait of Mozart painted in Munich in 1790, a year before the composer's death in Vienna. The identification was authenticated by Wolgang Seiller, a leading expert on Mozart, who said it was painted during the composer's final stay in the Bavarian capital.

The 31.5 by 24.5-inch painting will be placed on view Jan. 27, the 249th anniversary of Mozart's birth in Salzburg, Austria.

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